Conagra beats sales estimates, sticks with full-year guidance

Conagra Brands Inc. said Thursday it had net income of $152.5 million, or 36 cents a share, in its fiscal first quarter to Aug. 27, down from $186.2 million, or 22 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. Adjusted per-share earnings came to 39 cents, just below the FactSet consensus of 40 cents. Sales fell to $1.804 billion from $1.895 billion, ahead of the FactSet consensus of $1.786 billion. The owner of food brands, including Marie Callender’s, Reddi-Wip, Hunt’s, Healthy Choice and Slim Jim, said it still expects fiscal 2018 sales to be down 2% to flat. Adjusted EPS is expected to range from $1.84 to $1.89, wrapping around the FactSet consensus of $1.86. Shares were not yet active premarket, but have fallen 16% in 2017, while the S&P 500 has gained 12%.

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From:: Stock Market News

Rite Aid’s stock falls after sales fall more than expected

Shares of Rite Aid Corp. slumped 3.5% in premarket trade Thursday, after the drugstore chain that is being acquired by Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. matched loss expectations but missed on sales. Net income for the quarter to Sept. 2 rose to $170.7 million, or 16 cents a share, from $14.8 million, or a penny a share, in the same period a year ago. Excluding non-recurring items, the adjusted per-share loss of 1 cent matched the FactSet consensus. Revenue fell 4.4% to $7.68 billion from $8.03 billion, below the FactSet consensus of $7.84 billion, as pharmacy segment sales declined 3.4%. Same-store sales declined 3.4%, while the FactSet average of two analyst estimates was a decline of 2.2%, as pharmacy sales fell 4.6% and front-end sales declined 0.9%. Separately, the company named Kermit Crawford as chief operating officer. Walgreens received regulatory clearance last week to buy Rite Aid assets, with store purchases expected to begin in October and be completed in spring 2018. Rite Aid’s stock has plunged 42% over the past three months, while Walgreens shares have gained 1.4% and the S&P 500 has tacked on 2.7%.

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From:: Stock Market News

Southwest shares slump 1.2% premarket after carrier says hurricanes will hurt earnings

Southwest Airlines Co. shares slid 1.2% in premarket trade Thursday, after the carrier said the recent natural disasters are expected to shave about $100 million off third-quarter operating revenue. The airline has canceled about 5,000 flights through Sept. 28 because of the natural disasters, which include hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, as well as the earthquake in Mexico. As a result, it expects third-quarter available seat miles, a measure of capacity, to increase about 3% from the year-earlier period. The company expects third-quarter operating revenue per available seat mile to be flat to down 1%. Operating expense per available seat mile, excluding fuel costs, special items and profit-sharing costs, is expected to rise 3% to 4%. The company is still expecting fuel costs of $2.00 to $2.05 a gallon, based on derivative contracts and market prices as of Sept. 22. Shares have gained 12% in 2017, roughly the same as the S&P 500’s gain.

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From:: Stock Market News

BlackBerry’s stock soars after surprise profit, revenue beat

Shares of BlackBerry Ltd. soared 7.8% in premarket trade Thursday, after the mobile security software company reported a surprise fiscal second-quarter profit and sales that beat expectations. Net income for the quarter to Aug. 31 was $19 million, despite a per-share loss of 7 cents, after a net loss of $372 million, or 71 cents a share, in the same period a year ago. Excluding non-recurring items, adjusted earnings per share came to 5 cents, beating the FactSet consensus of a breakeven quarter. Revenue fell to $238 million from $334 million, but beat the FactSet consensus of $222 million. Enterprise software and services revenue rose to $91 million from $84 million and licensing, IP and other revenue grew to $56 million from $16 million, while handheld devices revenue dropped to $16 million from $105 million. For the full fiscal year, BlackBerry expects “positive” adjusted EPS, compared with the FactSet consensus of 4 cents, and adjusted revenue of $920 million to $950 million. The FactSet revenue consensus is $916 million. The stock has dropped 9.8% over the past three months but has run up 34% year to date, while the S&P 500 has gained 12% this year.

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From:: Stock Market News

Japan parliament dissolved, snap elections called: report

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe dissolved the country’s lower house of parliament on Thursday, with snap elections expected on Oct. 22, according to media reports. Abe is looking to boost his support from voters as his popularity has increased amid the crisis with North Korea. Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) currently has a two-thirds “super” majority. Meanwhile, a new political party that launched on Wednesday by Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike is already gaining support, according to media reports. But that new party — the Party of Hope — has created turmoil for the LDP, which some say could be absorbed by the Party of Hope.

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From:: Stock Market News

Twitter used extensively to spread suspected Russian fake news: report

While the use of targeted ads on Facebook Inc. has been the central focus of potential Russian election-meddling through fake news, Twitter Inc. may have been by Russian agitators used more extensively, the New York Times reported late Wednesday. The Times found a network of suspected Russian-linked Twitter accounts were still tweeting divisive messages last weekend about the many NFL protests during the national anthem. According to the Times report, there is evidence that Russian “bot” accounts spread misinformation during the 2016 presidential campaign, intended to spread discord among Americans. Twitter is scheduled to brief members of the Senate and House intelligence committees Thursday, and has been invited, along with Facebook and Alphabet Inc.’s Google, to testify publicly on Capitol Hill in November.

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From:: Stock Market News

CFPB Issues Order Over RESPA Violations

A settlement agent out of Indiana will pay more than a million dollars as part of an order alleging that it steered business to an affiliated business without disclosing the affiliation.

On Wednesday, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau issued a consent order against Meridian Title Corp. for alleged violations of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act.

The bureau claims that the South Bend, Indiana-based firm steered consumers to a title insurer owned in part by several of its executives. But no disclosures were made to customers about the business affiliation.


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From:: Financing

Roku sets $14 per share IPO price on $1.3 billion valuation

Streaming software and device maker Roku Inc. has priced its initial public offering at $14 per share on Wednesday, according to Dow Jones sources. The company is set to list on Nasdaq under the ticker “ROKU” and should begin trading Thursday. The company will raise $219 million in funding at a value of $1.3 billion. Roku had expected to price the IPO between $12 and $14, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company’s net loss for the second quarter of 2017 widened to $15 million from $14 million in the year-earlier period, on sales of $99.6 million. Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and Allen & Co. are listed as underwriters, according to a filing with the SEC.

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From:: Stock Market News

National Fair Housing Alliance settles race discrimination case with Mississippi real estate agents

The National Fair Housing Alliance announced this week that it reached a settlement with a group of Jackson, Mississippi real estate agents over allegations that the agents discriminated against homebuyers. The NFHA said that an investigation found that when “potential White homebuyers sought housing in integrated and predominantly African American neighborhoods, they were steered away.” …read more

From:: Real Estate Wire